Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
E-Daakhil is an online portal launched on 7 September 2020 by The National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission (NCDRC) for online and offline filing of complaints by aggrieved consumers and also facilitates of digital payments related to it. [1] The portal is available in Consumer Redressal Commissions of various states of India. [2] [3] [4] [5]
[3] [4] Worthington reported Ahmad Dilshad was also known as "Danish Ahmad" and "Abdul Rehman al-Dakhil". Asia Times called him a "leading LeT [Lashkar-e-Tayyiba] ringleader" —a militant group devoted to an independence for the portion of Kashmir occupied by India . [ 5 ]
The special rapporteurs, working with one single assistant, [36] had conveyed in their annual reports "the need for the establishment of an inquiry mechanism with adequate resources" [37] that "could produce a more complete picture, quantify and qualify the violations in terms of international law, attribute responsibility to particular actors ...
The Inspector-General of the Australian Defence Force Afghanistan Inquiry Report, commonly known as the Brereton Report (after the investigation head), is a report into war crimes allegedly committed by the Australian Defence Force (ADF) during the War in Afghanistan between 2005 and 2016. [2]
Kharij, sometimes translated as The Case is Closed, is a 1982 Bengali film by Mrinal Sen under the banner of Neelkanth Films. It is based on the 1974 Ramapada Chowdhury novel of the same name. [ 1 ] The film was a hit at the box-office.
Kharāj (Arabic: خراج) is a type of individual Islamic tax on agricultural land and its produce, regardless of the religion of the owners, developed under Islamic law. [1]
Dr. Khalid Al-Dakhil (Arabic: خالد الدخيل) is a Saudi Arabian assistant professor of political sociology at King Saud University in Saudi Arabia. He has been a columnist for London's Al-Hayat newspaper ( صحيفة الحياة ) and is now a columnist for the Al-Ittihad newspaper ( صحيفة أبو ظبي ).
Ganzibra Dakhil Mandi (officially registered as the Mandi Genzvra Dakhil [1]) is a Mandaean temple in downtown Liverpool, New South Wales, Australia. It is named after Rishama Dakhil Aidan , [ 2 ] who was the head priest of the Mandaean community in Iraq from 1917 to 1964.